Minnesota may soon OK free menstrual products in schools; Bird flu is back
Thursday brings another cold day behind our storm. But it looks like spring will finally arrive starting this weekend. Get the latest on Updraft. đ§ Coming up at 9 a.m. Thursday, MPR News host Angela Davis talks with three women who work in high-level positions for Minnesota sports teams about their experiences and how the front office is changing. | |
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| | Minnesota may soon OK free menstrual products in schools. These teens led the way | High school students pressed lawmakers for years to act, detailing the practical indignities of dealing with periods at school. With a bill poised to pass the Legislature this year, the teens say theyâve learned lessons on power, persistence and making change. âWe cannot learn while we are leaking,â Elif Ozturk told a legislative hearing in January as she and other teens made their case for Minnesota to provide free menstrual products in public schools. âItâs just simply the truth,â she noted later. âThis is a fear everyone knows, and it is happening in our schools all of the time.â | |
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| A 'new normal': Health officials, poultry farmers brace for likely return of avian flu. Avian influenza has returned to Minnesota after a brief break. A new outbreak of the virus was reported this week in a backyard flock in southern Minnesota. Inside a Twin Cities coupleâs âTrans-Glam-Punk-Rock Love Story.â Two local artists â author Lynette Reini-Grandell and musician Venus de Mars â share their story of transitioning, resilience and advocacy, now captured in a new memoir, âWild Things: A Trans-Glam-Punk-Rock Love Story,â out now from Minnesota Historical Society Press. Here's how to grow seeds, grains and spices in your garden, plus other tips from gardener Meg Cowden. You know what they say: April showers bring May flowers. Minnesota has certainly had the showers â and, uh, snow â so far. Here are your spring tips. Photos: Massive waves hit Minnesota's North Shore amid winter storm. The storm brought winds gusting at 60 mph or more, making for treacherous conditions on the lake. Despite the danger, a surfer was photographed catching a wave with the iconic Split Rock Lighthouse in the background. â Sam Stroozas, MPR News |
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